Mission
Reach Data exists to make Canadian energy information legible. The data already exists — published by federal agencies, provincial grid operators, and Statistics Canada. What hasn't existed is a single, well-organized, neutral place to access it.
Our mission is straightforward: compile authoritative energy data for every Canadian province and territory, keep it current, and present it without spin or agenda.
"To provide the most accurate, accessible, and politically neutral energy intelligence platform in Canada — organized so that anyone making decisions about Canadian energy infrastructure can find what they need in minutes, not days."
What We Are
Reach Data is a data platform. We compile, organize, and present publicly available Canadian energy data in a standardized format. Every figure on this site comes from a named primary source — NRCan, CER, Statistics Canada, or a provincial grid operator. We document where each number comes from and flag when sources disagree.
- A structured reference for province-level electricity data
- A neutral aggregator of federal and provincial energy statistics
- A downloadable dataset for researchers, analysts, and developers
- A starting point for infrastructure siting, investment screening, and policy research
What We Are Not
We are not a consulting firm, an advocacy organization, or a commercial energy brokerage. We do not advise on specific transactions, represent any province's economic development interests, or take positions on energy policy debates.
- Not a forecast or predictive analytics platform
- Not affiliated with any government agency, utility, or industry association
- Not a replacement for professional due diligence on energy procurement
- Not a real-time data feed — figures are updated quarterly from published sources
The Opportunity
Canada is at an inflection point in global energy infrastructure discussions. The combination of low-cost renewable electricity, cold climate, stable political institutions, and available land makes several Canadian provinces genuinely competitive locations for energy-intensive operations — data centers, AI compute, electrolytic hydrogen, and advanced manufacturing among them.
Yet the data needed to evaluate that opportunity is fragmented. A researcher comparing Manitoba's hydro rates to Ontario's industrial pricing has to visit four different government websites, reconcile different methodologies, and often find that the most recent data is 18 months old and buried in a PDF.
Reach Data is the answer to that problem. It will not replace primary source due diligence — but it gives anyone starting that process a clean, honest picture of where Canada stands.
Who Uses This Data
- Infrastructure developers evaluating site selection across Canadian provinces
- Investors and analysts assessing Canadian energy sector fundamentals
- Researchers and academics studying clean energy transition metrics
- Journalists fact-checking claims about Canadian electricity
- Policy professionals comparing provincial energy strategies
- Anyone curious about where Canada's electricity actually comes from
Contact
For data corrections, methodology questions, or partnership inquiries:
We review all data corrections. If you have primary source documentation that contradicts figures on this site, we want to hear from you. Attribution will be given where corrections are applied.